"Winnipeg's Sweetheart," the Canadian-born singer and actress Deanna Durbin made her feature-length film debut at 15 in the Best Picture–nominated Three Smart Girls (1936), which leads off this six-film retrospective of her work. By 1939, she was starring in the Cinderella-esque First Love, (nominated for three Oscars). By the time It Started With Eve (nominated for Best Musical Score) was released in 1941, Durbin was the highest paid actress in the world. Can't Help Singing (1944), Lady on a Train (1945), and Something in the Wind (1947) followed. The next year she abruptly retired and moved to a French farmhouse, where she lived for 48 years with her third husband, director Charles David.